People's Justice Party (Malaysia)


People's Justice Party
Parti Keadilan Rakyat
AbbreviationPKR
KEADILAN
PresidentAnwar Ibrahim
Secretary-GeneralFuziah Salleh
Deputy PresidentNurul Izzah Anwar
Vice-PresidentsAmirudin Shari
Ramanan Ramakrishnan
Aminuddin Harun
Chang Lih Kang
Roland Engan
Women's ChiefFadhlina Sidek
Youth ChiefKamil Abdul Munim (AMK)
Nurhidayah Che Rose (Srikandi)
Founders
Founded4 April 1999 (1999-04-04) (as Parti Keadilan Nasional)
3 August 2003 (2003-08-03) (as Parti Keadilan Rakyat)
Merger ofNational Justice Party (KeADILan)
Malaysian People's Party (PRM)
HeadquartersA-1-09, Merchant Square, Jalan Tropicana Selatan 1, 47410 Petaling Jaya, Selangor
NewspaperSuara Keadilan
Think tankInstitut Rakyat
Student wingMahasiswa Keadilan
Youth wingAngkatan Muda Keadilan (AMK)
Women's wingWanita Keadilan
Women's youth wingSrikandi Keadilan
Membership1,153,212 (2024)[1]
Ideology Factions:
Political positionCentre[23]
Factions:
Centre-left[26] to centre-right[30]
National affiliationBarisan Alternatif (1999–2004)
Pakatan Rakyat (2008–2015)
Pakatan Harapan (since 2015)
Colours  Light blue
SloganKeadilan Untuk Semua[31]
('Justice for All')
Anthem"Arus Perjuangan Bangsa"
('Currents of National Struggle')
Dewan Negara
6 / 70
Dewan Rakyat
31 / 222
Dewan Undangan Negeri
38 / 611
Chief minister of states
2 / 13
Election symbol
Party flag
Website
keadilanrakyat.org

The People's Justice Party (Malay: Parti Keadilan Rakyat, PKR or KEADILAN)[31] is a reformist political party in Malaysia. It was founded in 2003 through the merger of its predecessor, the National Justice Party (KeADILan), with the socialist Malaysian People's Party (PRM).[32] The party's predecessor was founded in 1999 by Wan Azizah Wan Ismail during the height of the Reformasi movement triggered by the imprisonment of her husband, former Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. Following the 2022 election that resulted in a hung parliament, the party governs Malaysia through a unity government led by Anwar Ibrahim as the tenth Prime Minister of Malaysia.

In the first general election of its predecessor in 1999, the party won five seats in the Dewan Rakyat.[33] A resurgence by the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) in 2004 reduced PKR to a single seat in the traditional stronghold of Permatang Pauh.[34][35] The 2008 election produced a substantial swing to the opposition, with PKR increasing its representation to 31 seats and forming the government in five states.[36][37] The 2008 results also precipitated the resignation of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and the lifting of Anwar Ibrahim's five-year political ban on 14 April 2008.[38]

The Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition, of which PKR is a founding and principal member, defeated Barisan Nasional at the 2018 general election, ending BN's uninterrupted 60-year rule since independence. However, defections from the faction aligned to Azmin Ali within the party and the withdrawal of BERSATU triggered the collapse of the PH government after just 22 months, leading to the 2020–2022 political crisis.[39] The party returned to government after the 2022 general election which resulted in Malaysia's first hung parliament. A unity government arrangement between Pakatan Harapan, former rivals Barisan Nasional, and several Borneo-based parties enabled the formation of a federal government led by Anwar Ibrahim.[40]

The multiracial party advocates for institutional reform and economic justice, drawing its strongest support from urban and semi-urban constituencies, particularly in the states of Selangor, Penang, Perak, Negeri Sembilan, Johor, and the capital city of Kuala Lumpur. The party's platform emphasises Reformasi-era priorities such as anti-corruption measures and social justice.[36]

History

Origins

Anwar Ibrahim, founder and leader of the party

The economy of Malaysia had been badly affected by the 1997 Asian financial crisis.[41] In response, Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim instituted a series of economic reforms and austerity measures under his jurisdiction as Minister of Finance. The package included reducing government spending by 18%, cutting ministerial salaries, and deferring major projects despite it being the cornerstone development strategy of the Mahathir government. The reforms were seen as challenging the administration's policies, and the situation was later exacerbated when he tabled controversial amendments to the Prevention of Corruption Act that sought to increase the powers of the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA).[42] Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad strongly disagreed with these measures, and towards the end of 1998, their relationship began to heavily deteriorate, triggered by their conflicting views on governance. Eventually, this culminated in Mahathir dismissing Anwar from his cabinet positions on 2 September 1998, before expelling Anwar from UMNO the day after. This was despite Anwar being his protégé and having deep influence within both the party and government.[43]

Anwar Ibrahim and sixteen of his political associates were later arrested between 20 and 29 September 1998 under the Internal Security Act (ISA).[44] Amnesty International designated the individuals in detention as "prisoners of conscience", stating they were held solely for non-violent political activities. Anwar later appeared in court with visible injuries after nine days in custody, raising concerns of prisoner abuse and incommunicado detention. Human rights organisations criticised the use of the ISA to detain political opponents, as well as the violent dispersal of peaceful pro-reform demonstrations and broader restrictions on freedom of assembly and expression by the government. The following political associates of Anwar were arrested under the Internal Security Act (ISA):

This incident and the circumstances in which it happened led to a public outcry in what became known as the Reformasi movement, but it also resulted in the arrest and subsequent detention without trial of Anwar on what many believed to be politically motivated charges of sexual misconduct and corruption.[44] The movement, which began as the country hosted the 1998 Commonwealth Games, initially demanded the resignation of Mahathir Mohamad and for the end of alleged corruption and cronyism within the Barisan Nasional-led (BN) government. It would go on to become a reform movement demanding social equality and social justice in Malaysia. The movement consisted of civil disobedience, demonstrations, sit-ins, rioting, occupations and internet activism.[32]

Founding and early history (1998–1999)

Despite Anwar being detained, the Reformasi movement continued to develop, with "Justice for Anwar" remaining a potent rallying call. Before his arrest, Anwar had designated his wife, Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, as the successor of the movement. Wan Azizah went on to develop an enormous following, attracting thousands to her speeches. For a time, these followers held massive weekend street demonstrations, mostly in Kuala Lumpur but also occasionally in Penang and other cities, demanding "keadilan" (justice) and Mahathir's resignation. During Anwar's police custody in September 1998, he was beaten by the Inspector-General of Police, Abdul Rahim Mohd Noor, causing the infamous black eye. The imagery of the black eye was adopted as a rallying symbol of demanded justice by his followers and eventually became the party flag—jocularly known as the Bendera Mata Lebam ("Black Eye Flag")—designed by artist Syed Ahmad Syed Jamal.[45]

Building on the momentum of Reformasi, a political movement called the Social Justice Movement (Malay: Pergerakan Keadilan Sosial), also known as ADIL, was launched on 10 December 1998 and was led by Wan Azizah.[46][47] However, facing difficulties in registering ADIL as a political party, the Reformasi movement instead merged with the Muslim Community Union of Malaysia (Malay: Ikatan Masyarakat Islam Malaysia), a minor Islamic political party based in Terengganu, and relaunched it as the National Justice Party (Malay: Parti Keadilan Nasional), also known as PKN or KeADILan, on 4 April 1999. The registration was just in time for the new party to take part in the 1999 general election.[48] The launch of KeADILan put to rest months of speculation about whether Wan Azizah and Anwar would continute remaining in ADIL, join the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), or attempt an internal coup within UMNO. Although KeADILan was multiracial, its primary target was middle-class, middle-of-the-road Malays, particularly from UMNO. The party has been noted as having rough similarities with the now-defunct social democratic Parti Keadilan Masyarakat Malaysia (PEKEMAS).[49]

Barisan Alternatif era (1999–2004)

On 24 October 1999, the party joined together with the Democratic Action Party (DAP), the Malaysian People's Party (PRM), and PAS in a big tent alliance of liberals, socialists, and Islamists, known as Barisan Alternatif (BA) to take on the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition in the 1999 general election.[50]

While parliament's term was set to end in June the next year, an early election was called in November under the pretext of avoiding "undesirable" behaviour during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in December. International media speculated that Mahathir wanted an early election to be held before some 650,000 new voters became eligible to participate.[51][52] In the lead-up to the election, seven activists, including Keadilan leaders; Vice-president Tian Chua, Gobalakrishnan Nagapan, Youth leader Ezam Mohd Nor, Fairus Izuddin and Dr Badrul Amin Baharun; were arrested between 27 and 30 September and as a result prevented from contesting.[53] Further arrests were made on 10 April 2001 and those arrested were subsequently charged and incarcerated under the Internal Security Act.[54] They became known as the Reformasi 10.[55]

With parliament dissolving on 11 November, parties were only left with 9 days' time to campaign between candidate nominations on 20 November and voting day on 29 November. The short campaign period drew criticism from the opposition, and the party entered the campaign with many of its key leaders under arrest. It also had to contend with the distribution of pornographic videocassettes implicating Anwar in the villages, as well as a lack of access to written and audiovisual media; the government denied opposition parties access to state-run public broadcaster Radio Televisyen Malaysia.[56][33] Thus, despite the party winning 11.67% of the total votes cast, it only managed to win five parliamentary seats. Notably, Wan Azizah managed to secure victory in Permatang Pauh; the seat formerly held by her husband, with a majority of 9,077 votes. The Barisan Alternatif as a whole gained 40.21% of the total votes cast, with PAS winning 27 seats and DAP winning ten seats. The big opposition winner was PAS, which gained 20 seats as well as a majority in two state assemblies in Kelantan and Terengganu.

For the first time in Malaysia's history, UMNO, the dominant Malay-based party which had ruled the country for 40 years since independence, received less than half of the total vote of ethnic Malays. Despite losing 14 seats, two of which belonged to federal ministers, the BN coalition still secured a two-thirds majority of 148 seats.

The post election period saw negotiations between Keadilan and Parti Rakyat Malaysia (PRM) on a possible merger.[57] Despite some opposition in both parties to the move,[58][59] a 13-point Memorandum of Understanding was eventually signed by the two parties on 5 July 2002.[60] On 3 August 2003, the new merged entity was officially launched and assumed its current name.[61] However, as PRM had yet to be de-registered by the authorities, dissident members took the opportunity to convene a national congress and revive the party under former youth leader Hassan Abdul Karim.

Electoral setback and merger (2004–2008)

Anwar Ibrahim speaking in 2005

As the new amendments to the party constitution had yet to be approved by the Registrar of Societies, candidates from PRM contested the 2004 general election using the symbol of the old National Justice Party.[62] The party fared poorly in the elections and only managed to retain one parliamentary seat, Permatang Pauh, despite winning 9% of the popular vote. The poor showing was later attributed to malapportionment and gerrymandering in the redelineation of constituencies, with one estimate suggesting that on average, a vote for the BN government was worth 28 times the vote of a KeADILan supporter.[63]

On 2 September 2004, the Federal Court overturned Anwar's sodomy conviction. As he had already served the entirety of his sentence for his corruption conviction, he was set free.[64] This unexpected turn of events came timely for PKR which was facing flagging morale due to its dismal performance in the elections.

In December 2005, PKR organised its second national congress.[65] Among the motions passed was the New Economic Agenda[66] that envisioned a non-racial economic policy to replace the race-based New Economic Policy. PKR managed a breakthrough into Sarawak politics in May 2006, a state traditionally known as a BN stronghold. In that year's Sarawak state elections, Dominique Ng Kim Ho, a lawyer and activist, won in the Padungan constituency in Kuching, a majority Chinese locale. The party narrowly lost in Saribas, a Malay-Melanau constituency, by just 94 votes. Afterwards, PKR pursued an aggressive strategy of attracting personalities from within and outside politics. In July 2006, Khalid Ibrahim, a former CEO of Permodalan Nasional Berhad and Guthrie, was appointed as treasurer of the party.

Pakatan Rakyat era (2008–2015)

In the 2008 elections, PKR contested alongside DAP and PAS in a new coalition known as Pakatan Rakyat (PR). The party won 31 seats in parliament, while DAP and PAS won 28 and 23 seats respectively. The 82 seats won by the coalition denied BN a two-thirds majority against a backdrop of rises in inflation, crime, and ethnic tension.[67]

PKR also successfully contested the state legislative elections which saw the loose coalition of PKR, DAP and PAS forming coalition governments in the states of Kelantan, Kedah, Penang, Perak and Selangor. The offices of the Menteri Besar of Selangor and the Deputy Chief Minister of Penang were held by PKR members, Khalid Ibrahim and Fairus Khairuddin, respectively.

Anwar's five-year ban from contesting elections, imposed on anyone sentenced to longer than a year in jail, ended on 14 April 2008.[68] A gathering held by supporters celebrating the end of the ban was dispersed by police.[69] Despite the ban, Anwar continued being widely seen as PKR's de facto leader throughout his imprisonment.[70]

Anwar returned to parliament on 28 August 2008 following a landslide victory in the 2008 Permatang Pauh by-election, triggered by Wan Azizah's resignation.[71][72] He was quoted as saying, "I'm glad to be back after a decade. The prime minister has lost the mandate of the country and the nation",[73][74] Despite the claim, Anwar would need at least 30 defections from government lawmakers to form a majority.[75][76]

In June 2010, the party's official newspaper, Suara Keadilan, was suspended over an article alleging that the Federal Land Development Authority (Felda) had gone bankrupt.[77] Government officials and Felda itself rejected the assertion as inaccurate.[78] The Malaysian Home Ministry responded by issuing a show-cause letter to the publication demanding an explanation, to which the ministry stated that it was unsatisfied with the response given by the editors.[79] The Home Ministry afterwards declined to renew the newspaper's publishing permit, which had expired on 30 June 2010, thereby halting its regular publication. The decision was made under the Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984, which grants the ministry broad authority to regulate and revoke publication permits.[80] The suspension drew criticism from civil society organisations and press freedom advocates, who viewed the move as a regulatory pressure on opposition-linked publications in Malaysia.[81]

On 9 January 2012, Anwar Ibrahim was acquitted of a separate sodomy charge from 2008 by the Kuala Lumpur High Court, presided over by Judge Mohamad Zabidin Diah. He had been accused by his former aide, Saiful Bukhari Azlan, of sodomising him.[82] The court determined that the prosecution had failed to establish elements of the offence beyond a reasonable doubt, leading to Anwar's full discharge from the case.

Kajang Move (2014)

In early 2014, party strategy director Rafizi Ramli initiated the Kajang Move in a failed bid to install Anwar Ibrahim as the Menteri Besar of Selangor. The move aimed to consolidate opposition control in the state amid perceived weaknesses in the leadership of incumbent Menteri Besar Khalid Ibrahim.[83] Proponents framed the move as an initiative intended to strengthen the coalition's rule and counter Barisan Nasional's influence by concentrating authority under a more assertive leader.[84] The move began on 27 January 2014 when Kajang state assemblyman Lee Chin Cheh resigned from his seat, triggering a by-election. PKR intended for Anwar to contest and win the seat, which would allow his appointment as Menteri Besar through internal party reconfiguration.[85]

However, the plan collapsed on 7 March when Anwar's acquittal in 2012 was overturned by the Court of Appeal.[86] He was sentenced to five years in prison on sodomy charges, a verdict which disqualified him from holding public office that critics widely described as politically motivated.[87] This prevented him from standing as a candidate in the 2014 Kajang by-election and potentially becoming Menteri Besar, although he remained a member of parliament pending the outcome of his appeal. The party subsequently nominated his wife, Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, as their candidate instead.[88]

Wan Azizah secured victory in the 23 March by-election with 59.6% of the vote against Barisan Nasional's candidate, but subsequent efforts to appoint her as Menteri Besar encountered resistance from the Selangor Sultan and internal Pakatan allies, particularly over constitutional and consensus issues.[89][90] Critics, including former Menteri Besar Khalid Ibrahim, described the move as an undemocratic “fiasco” that bypassed electoral mandates and exposed internal power struggles within PKR.[91] The political manoeuvre resulted in a nine-month political crisis within the Selangor state government and caused fractures within the Pakatan Rakyat coalition, requiring the involvement of the Royal Palace of Selangor.[92] The crisis concluded with the appointment of PKR's Deputy President, Azmin Ali, as the 15th Menteri Besar of Selangor, and the expulsion of Khalid Ibrahim from the party.[93] Most analysts regarded the Kajang Move as a failure.[94]

Pakatan Harapan era (2015–present)

In 2015, Anwar Ibrahim's conviction was upheld, and he was imprisoned for a second time.[95][96] Without his influence, conflict immediately emerged between PAS and DAP regarding the implementation of sharia law in Kelantan and Terengganu, resulting in the dissolution of the Pakatan Rakyat coalition in June 2015.[97][98] It was succeeded by a new coalition known as Pakatan Harapan (PH) in September 2015, formed by the remnants of Pakatan Rakyat and the newly established National Trust Party (AMANAH), a PAS splinter which consisted of moderate PAS leaders who were ousted during the party's 2015 leadership election.[99][100] The new coalition emphasised multiracial reformism, with a common manifesto pledging anti-corruption measures, electoral reforms, and economic redistribution to counter the long-standing dominance of Barisan Nasional.[101]

The earlier split with PAS had left PKR and DAP without a Malay support base. However, this was supplemented by the entry of the Malaysian United Indigenous Party (BERSATU) in March 2017 as the fourth coalition partner. The UMNO splinter was led by former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, and it brought veteran leadership while bolstering the coalition's Malay appeal against the ruling BN government. The entry of Mahathir's party marked the reconciliation of Anwar Ibrahim and Mahathir Mohamad, two longtime enemies since the former's imprisonment by the latter in 1998.

As the main opposition from 2015 to 2018, PKR challenged BN's rule through the PH coalition by highlighting scandals, such as the 1MDB fund mismanagement, where investigations revealed over US$4.5 billion in diverted assets linked to the accounts of Prime Minister Najib Razak.[102] PH leveraged parliamentary scrutiny, public rallies, and protests organised by the Bersih coalition to erode BN's legitimacy.

Government formation (2018–2020)

When the 14th general election was held on 9 May 2018, Pakatan Harapan (PH) secured 113 of the 222 seats in the Dewan Rakyat, surpassing the 112 seats needed to form the government. The outcome ended 61 years of uninterrupted Barisan Nasional rule since Malaysia's independence in 1957.[103] Meanwhile, PKR won 47 seats to become the largest party within the PH coalition. Mahathir Mohamad was sworn in as the seventh prime minister by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong at the Istana Negara on 10 May, and at the age of 92, became the world's oldest serving head of government at the time.[104] The cabinet was formed with 25 members, including PKR president Wan Azizah Wan Ismail as deputy prime minister.

During its early period in office, the Pakatan Harapan government focused on implementing pledges from its "Buku Harapan" manifesto.[105] The manifesto outlined ten key actions to be taken within the first 100 days, including the abolition of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and the recovery of misappropriated public funds. The government also established a special task force to investigate the 1MDB scandal, which led to the seizure of assets belonging to former prime minister Najib Razak and the filing of corruption and money laundering charges against him. Other early measures included a review of major infrastructure projects such as the East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) for potential cost inflation, as well as an announcement of the government's intention to ratify the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD). However, the decision was reversed following high participation in the 2018 anti-ICERD rally.[106]

As stipulated in the Pakatan Harapan manifesto, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Muhammad V of Kelantan, granted a full royal pardon to imprisoned opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim. He was released from Sungai Buloh Prison on 16 May after serving time on sodomy charges, which Anwar had maintained were politically motivated.[107] Considered the prime minister–in-waiting, Anwar returned to parliament on 13 October through a by-election in Port Dickson. The by-election was triggered by the resignation of the incumbent, Danyal Balagopal Abdullah, a party member who vacated the seat to facilitate Anwar's return.[108] The move became known as the "PD Move".[109] Having previously been unable to contest the general election due to his imprisonment, Anwar secured the seat with a majority of over 31,000 votes, defeating six other candidates.[110]

However, progress on broader structural reforms, including parliamentary redelineation and anti-corruption measures, proved slower amid internal disagreements and bureaucratic resistance.[111] By August 2018, only a portion of the 100-day pledges had been fully implemented. Critics pointed to delays in economic stabilisation efforts, such as price controls for essential goods.[112] Gross domestic product growth declined from 5.9 percent in 2018 to 4.3 percent in 2019, driven by global trade tensions and domestic fiscal tightening.[113] As a result, the coalition faced difficulties in fully delivering on its manifesto, including partial toll reductions and subsidy rationalisation, due to the economic slowdown during that period.

Political crisis and opposition (2020–2022)

Towards the end of 2019, tensions gradually emerged over the planned transition of power from Mahathir Mohamad to Anwar Ibrahim, which had been scheduled to occur within two years of the coalition taking office.[114] Mahathir repeatedly refused to stand down, citing the need to complete reforms and the resolution of Anwar's legal clearance process. This dispute created a rift within PKR and began straining the coalition's unity.[115] Within the party, an internal split developed between Anwar's leadership and the faction supporting Deputy President Azmin Ali, often referred to as the "Azmin cartel".[116] This faction was seen as aligned with Mahathir, and the conflict led to public disputes and eventually defections that weakened the party's cohesion.[117] The events culminated in the 2020–2022 Malaysian political crisis, triggered by Mahathir's sudden resignation as prime minister on 24 February 2020, which brought an end to the Pakatan Harapan government after 22 months. Mahathir did not provide a stated reason for his resignation, though reports indicated the move preempted an imminent parliamentary vote to appoint Anwar as prime minister.[118]

The resulting power vacuum led to rapid realignments among MPs in an episode dubbed the "Sheraton Move", named after the Sheraton Hotel in Kuala Lumpur where defecting lawmakers met on 23 and 24 February to gather support for an alternative government.[119][120] The outcome was the formation of the right-wing Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition on 29 February, comprising BERSATU, PAS, and Azmin-aligned defectors from PKR. A new government was formed afterwards on 1 March by Muhyiddin Yassin of BERSATU, with a majority in Parliament obtained through the defections of eleven PKR members of parliament, including Azmin Ali, Zuraida Kamaruddin, Saifuddin Abdullah, Kamarudin Jaffar, Mansor Othman, Mohd Rashid Hasnon, Edmund Santhara, Ali Biju, Willie Mongin, Jonathan Yasin, and Baru Bian.[121] All except Baru Bian chose to align with the Perikatan Nasional government formed afterwards, and they were later joined by Jugah Muyang, an independent who only joined PKR after the 2018 election.[122]

The party subsequently suffered an exodus of members aligned with Azmin nationwide.[128] This included elected representatives at the state level, thereby enabling the PN takeover of two state governments. The defection of Chong Fat Full secured a majority for PN in Johor, whereas Robert Ling Kui Ee and Azman Nasrudin led a similar outcome in Kedah.[129][130][131] Other notable defections include Daroyah Alwi, the Deputy Speaker of the Selangor legislative assembly, and Afif Bahardin, a former vice youth chief.[132][133] The remaining Azmin supporters were later expelled, including Women's Chief Haniza Talha and state representatives Zulkifli Ibrahim and Kenny Chua Teck Ho.[134][135] Defections continued into 2021 with two MPs, Steven Choong and Larry Sng, resigning to form Parti Bangsa Malaysia (PBM) and declare support for the ruling PN government.[136] The last MP to resign was Vice-President Xavier Jayakumar, who cited 'frustrations' with the events of the past year and subsequently became a PN-aligned independent.[137]

Return to government (2022–present)

Ahead of the 2022 general election, the party campaigned on its "Tawaran Harapan" manifesto, which emphasised tackling the cost of living, strengthening institutional independence, and pursuing anti-corruption efforts.[138] The election marked a slight setback for Pakatan Harapan, which won a reduced plurality of 82 seats. PKR returned only 31 MPs to Parliament from the 47 seats previously won, thereby losing its status as the coalition's largest component to DAP with 40 seats. However, the party returned to power through a negotiated coalition government, colloquially known as the "Unity Government" (transl.Kerajaan Perpaduan), formed between Pakatan Harapan and its former adversaries, including Barisan Nasional, Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS), Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS), and several minor parties, with Anwar Ibrahim appointed as the tenth prime minister.[139][140]

The arrangement marked a departure from the party's pre-election opposition to Barisan Nasional, as stability and continuity in governance were prioritised over idealism due to sustained destabilisation efforts by Perikatan Nasional.[141] Despite alignment at the leadership level, historical animosity between UMNO and PKR complicated cooperation within the grassroots, where distrust continued to persist.[142] The formation drew criticism from the party's hardliner faction led by Deputy President Rafizi Ramli, particularly over unease that cooperation with UMNO would contradict earlier reformist positions, as the "Grand Old Party" embodied the political establishment that the party sought to challenge since its founding.[143][144]

Having emerged from a political crisis and the COVID-19 recession, Anwar's administration stressed political stability as the basis for economic recovery.[145] The cabinet was appointed in December 2022, with ministerial portfolios assigned to maintain support from Barisan Nasional and the East Malaysian parties. With an ideologically diverse cabinet, stability efforts focused on coalition consensus and gradual policy implementation to prevent fragmentation. However, the incremental pace of reforms led to intensified criticism from party hardliners.[146] This culminated in a power struggle during the 2025 party elections between the hardliners, led by Rafizi Ramli under the HIRUK (lit.'agitate') faction, and the party establishment, led by Nurul Izzah Anwar under the DAMAI (lit.'peace') faction.[147][148] The party polls resulted in the landslide defeat and ouster of Rafizi as deputy president, along with other aligned leaders at the central and divisional levels, including Nik Nazmi as vice president.[149] Rafizi's defeat was interpreted as a demonstration of Anwar Ibrahim's overwhelming influence, with a strong mandate for the continuity of his vision for the party.[150] The period after the party polls saw a consolidation of the unity government and the continued strengthening of ties between UMNO and PKR.[151][152]

Ideology

A supporter of liberal democracy, PKR's constitution has as one of its core principles, the establishment of "a society that is just and a nation that is democratic, progressive and united".[153][154] In practice, the party has primarily focused on promoting social and economic justice, eliminating political corruption, and addressing human rights issues within a non-ethnic framework.[161]

The party has also been described as having socially conservative and Islamic reformist factions influenced by the Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement (ABIM), of which Anwar was once president, which actively promotes Islamic values and maqasid syariah within its political platform.[162]

Organisational structure

Central Leadership Council (2025–2028)

Leadership

President

No. Name Term of office Mandates
1 Wan Azizah Wan Ismail 4 April 1999 17 November 2018 1st (2001)

2nd (2004) 3rd (2007)

4th (2010) 5th (2014)

2 Anwar Ibrahim 17 November 2018 Incumbent 6th (2018)

7th (2022) 8th (2025)

Deputy President

No. Name Term of office Mandates
1 Chandra Muzaffar 4 April 1999 11 November 2001
2 Abdul Rahman Othman 11 November 2001 27 May 2007 1st (2001)

2nd (2004)

3 Syed Husin Ali 27 May 2007 28 November 2010 3rd (2007)
4 Azmin Ali 28 November 2010 24 February 2020 4th (2010)

5th (2014) 6th (2018)

- Vacant 24 February 2020 17 July 2022 -
5 Rafizi Ramli 17 July 2022 24 May 2025 7th (2022)
6 Nurul Izzah Anwar 24 May 2025 Incumbent 8th (2025)

Women's Chief

No. Name Term of office Mandates
1 Nell @ Azah Onn 4 April 1999 4 November 1999
- Vacant 4 November 1999 2000 -
2 Fuziah Salleh 2000 27 May 2007 1st (2001)

2nd (2004)

3 Zuraida Kamaruddin 27 May 2007 18 November 2018 3rd (2007)

4th (2010) 5th (2014)

4 Haniza Talha 18 November 2018 29 June 2020 6th (2018)
- Vacant 29 June 2020 11 July 2020 -
5 Fuziah Salleh 11 July 2020 4 July 2022
6 Fadhlina Sidek 4 July 2022 Incumbent 7th (2022)

8th (2025)

Youth Chief

No. Name Term of office Mandates
1 Ezam Mohd Nor 4 April 1999 30 October 2006 1st (2001)

2nd (2004)

2 Shamsul Iskandar Mohd Akin 30 October 2006 22 August 2014 3rd (2007)

4th (2010)

3 Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad 22 August 2014 16 November 2018 5th (2014)
4 Akmal Nasrullah Mohd Nasir 16 November 2018 17 July 2022 6th (2018)
5 Adam Adli Abd Halim 17 July 2022 23 May 2025 7th (2022)
6 Kamil Abdul Munim 24 May 2025 Incumbent 8th (2025)

Elected representatives

Dewan Negara (Senate)

Senators

Dewan Rakyat (House of Representatives)

Members of Parliament of the 15th Malaysian Parliament

PKR has 31 members in the House of Representatives.

State No. Parliament Constituency Member Party
Kedah P015 Sungai Petani Mohammed Taufiq Johari PKR
Penang P047 Nibong Tebal Fadhlina Sidek PKR
P052 Bayan Baru Sim Tze Tzin PKR
P053 Balik Pulau Muhammad Bakhtiar Wan Chik PKR
Perak P062 Sungai Siput Kesavan Subramaniam PKR
P063 Tambun Anwar Ibrahim PKR
P071 Gopeng Tan Kar Hing PKR
P077 Tanjong Malim Chang Lih Kang PKR
Selangor P097 Selayang William Leong Jee Keen PKR
P098 Gombak Amirudin Shari PKR
P099 Ampang Rodziah Ismail PKR
P100 Pandan Rafizi Ramli PKR
P104 Subang Wong Chen PKR
P105 Petaling Jaya Lee Chean Chung PKR
P107 Sungai Buloh Ramanan Ramakrishnan PKR
Kuala Lumpur P115 Batu Prabakaran Parameswaran PKR
P116 Wangsa Maju Zahir Hassan PKR
P118 Setiawangsa Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad PKR
P121 Lembah Pantai Fahmi Fadzil PKR
P124 Bandar Tun Razak Wan Azizah Wan Ismail PKR
Negeri Sembilan P132 Port Dickson Aminuddin Harun PKR
Malacca P137 Hang Tuah Jaya Adam Adli Abdul Halim PKR
Johor P140 Segamat Yuneswaran Ramaraj PKR
P141 Sekijang Zaliha Mustafa PKR
P144 Ledang Syed Ibrahim Syed Noh PKR
P150 Batu Pahat Onn Abu Bakar PKR
P158 Tebrau Jimmy Puah Wee Tse PKR
P159 Pasir Gudang Hassan Abdul Karim PKR
P160 Johor Bahru Akmal Nasrullah Mohd Nasir PKR
Sabah P171 Sepanggar Mustapha Sakmud PKR
Sarawak P219 Miri Chiew Choon Man PKR
Total Kedah (1), Penang (3), Perak (4), Selangor (7), F.T. Kuala Lumpur (5), Negeri Sembilan (1), Malacca (1), Johor (7), Sabah (1), Sarawak (1)

Dewan Undangan Negeri (State Legislative Assembly)

Malaysian State Assembly Representatives

State No. Parliament Constituency No. State Constituency Member Party
Perlis P002 Kangar N08 Indera Kayangan Gan Ay Ling PKR
Kedah P015 Sungai Petani N28 Bakar Arang Adam Loh Wei Chai PKR
N29 Sidam Bau Wong Bau Ek PKR
Penang P045 Bukit Mertajam N14 Machang Bubok Lee Khai Loon PKR
P046 Batu Kawan N17 Bukit Tengah Gooi Hsiao-Leung PKR
N18 Bukit Tambun Goh Choon Aik PKR
P048 Bukit Bendera N24 Kebun Bunga Lee Boon Heng PKR
P052 Bayan Baru N35 Batu Uban Kumaresan Aramugam PKR
N36 Pantai Jerejak Fahmi Zainol PKR
N37 Batu Maung Mohamad Abdul Hamid PKR
Perak P063 Tambun N24 Hulu Kinta Muhamad Arafat Varisai Mahamad PKR
P070 Kampar N43 Tulang Sekah Mohd Azlan Helmi PKR
P071 Gopeng N45 Simpang Pulai Wong Chai Yi PKR
N46 Teja Sandrea Ng Shy Ching PKR
P075 Bagan Datuk N54 Hutan Melintang Wasanthee Sinnasamy PKR
Pahang P082 Indera Mahkota N13 Semambu Chan Chun Kuang PKR
P083 Kuantan N14 Teruntum Sim Chon Siang PKR
Nominated Member Rizal Jamin PKR
Selangor P097 Selayang N14 Rawang Chua Wei Kiat PKR
P098 Gombak N16 Sungai Tua Amirudin Shari PKR
P099 Ampang N19 Bukit Antarabangsa Mohd Kamri Kamaruddin PKR
N20 Lembah Jaya Syed Ahmad Syed Abdul Rahman Al-Hadad PKR
P102 Bangi N25 Kajang David Cheong Kian Young PKR
P105 Petaling Jaya N32 Seri Setia Mohammad Fahmi Ngah PKR
P106 Damansara N37 Bukit Lanjan Pua Pei Ling PKR
P107 Sungai Buloh N39 Kota Damansara Izuan Kasim PKR
P108 Shah Alam N40 Kota Anggerik Najwan Halimi PKR
P110 Klang N46 Pelabuhan Klang Azmizam Zaman Huri PKR
P111 Kota Raja N48 Sentosa Gunarajah George PKR
P113 Sepang N51 Tanjong Sepat Borhan Aman Shah PKR
Negeri Sembilan P128 Seremban N13 Sikamat Aminuddin Harun PKR
N14 Ampangan Tengku Zamrah Tengku Sulaiman PKR
P129 Kuala Pilah N18 Pilah Noorzunita Begum Mohd Ibrahim PKR
P132 Port Dickson N29 Chuah Yew Boon Lye PKR
N33 Sri Tanjung Rajasekaran Gunnasekaran PKR
Johor P163 Kulai N51 Bukit Batu Arthur Chiong Sen Sern PKR
Sabah P181 Tenom N42 Melalap Jamawi Ja'afar PKR
- Nominated Member Grace Lee Li Mei PKR
Total Perlis (1), Kedah (2), Penang (7), Perak (5), Pahang (3), Selangor (12), Negeri Sembilan (5), Johor (1), Sabah (2)

Government offices

Ministerial posts

Portfolio Office bearer Constituency
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim Perak Tambun
Minister of Finance
Minister of Home Affairs Saifuddin Nasution Ismail Senator
Minister of Economy Akmal Nasir Johor Johor Bahru
Minister of Education Fadhlina Sidek Penang Nibong Tebal
Minister of Youth and Sports Mohammed Taufiq Johari Kedah Sungai Petani
Minister of Human Resources Ramanan Ramakrishnan Selangor Sungai Buloh
Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation Chang Lih Kang Perak Tanjong Malim
Minister of Communications Fahmi Fadzil Kuala Lumpur Lembah Pantai
Minister in the Prime Minister's Department

(Sabah and Sarawak Affairs)

Mustapha Sakmud Sabah Sepanggar
Portfolio Office bearer Constituency
Deputy Minister of Investment, Trade and Industry Sim Tze Tzin Penang Bayan Baru
Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability Syed Ibrahim Syed Noh Johor Ledang
Deputy Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture Chiew Choon Man Sarawak Miri
Deputy Minister of Higher Education Adam Adli Abdul Halim Malacca Hang Tuah Jaya
Deputy Minister of Domestic Trade and Costs of Living Fuziah Salleh Senator
Deputy Minister of National Unity Yuneswaran Ramaraj Johor Segamat

State governments

PKR currently leads the government of Selangor and Negeri Sembilan and served as junior partner in several states governed by Pakatan Harapan, GRS and Barisan Nasional

Note: bold as Menteri Besar/Chief Minister, italic as junior partner

State Position Office bearer State constituency
Negeri Sembilan Menteri Besar Aminuddin Harun Sikamat
Selangor Menteri Besar Amirudin Shari Sungai Tua
State Position Office bearer State constituency
Penang Deputy Chief Minister I Mohamad Abdul Hamid Batu Maung

Legislative leadership

Position Office bearer Constituency
Speaker of the Dewan Rakyat Johari Abdul Non-MP
State Position Office bearer State constituency
Penang Speaker Law Choo Kiang Non-MLA
Selangor Deputy Speaker Mohd Kamri Kamaruddin Bukit Antarabangsa

Official opposition

State Position Office bearer State constituency
Kedah Opposition Leader Bau Wong Bau Ek Sidam
Perlis Opposition Leader Gan Ay Ling Indera Kayangan

Election results

General election results

Dewan Rakyat
Election Leader Votes Seats Position[a] Government
No. Share Won Contested ± Share
Founded as Parti Keadilan Nasional
1999 Wan Azizah Wan Ismail 773,679 11.7%
5 / 193
5 / 78
Increase 5 2.6% 2nd
(Barisan Alternatif)
Barisan Nasional
Merged with Parti Rakyat Malaysia in 2004 to become Parti Keadilan Rakyat
2004 Wan Azizah Wan Ismail 617,518 8.9%
1 / 219
1 / 80
Decrease 4 0.5% Decrease 3rd
(Barisan Alternatif)
Barisan Nasional
2008 1,509,080 18.6%
31 / 222
31 / 84
Increase 30 14.0% Increase 2nd
(Pakatan Rakyat)
Barisan Nasional
2013 Anwar Ibrahim 2,254,211 20.4%
30 / 222
30 / 99
Decrease 1 13.5% Steady 2nd
(Pakatan Rakyat)
Barisan Nasional
2018 Wan Azizah Wan Ismail 2,046,394 16.9%
47 / 222
47 / 70
Increase 17 21.2% Increase 1st
(Pakatan Harapan)
Pakatan Harapan[b]
2022 Anwar Ibrahim 2,442,038 15.7%
31 / 222
31 / 100
Decrease 16 14.0% Steady 1st
(Pakatan Harapan)
Pakatan Harapan–Barisan Nasional[c]
Note
  1. ^ As part of electoral coalition.
  2. ^ Majority government (2018–2020); Opposition (2020–2022).
  3. ^ Coalition government.

State election results

State election State Legislative Assembly
Perlis Kedah Kelantan Terengganu Penang Perak Pahang Selangor Negeri Sembilan Malacca Johor Sabah Sarawak Seats won / contested
2/3 majority
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
2 / 3
1999
0 / 15
0 / 36
0 / 43
0 / 32
1 / 33
1 / 52
1 / 38
1 / 48
0 / 32
0 / 25
0 / 40
0 / 48
4 / 70
2001
0 / 62
0 / 25
2004
0 / 15
0 / 36
0 / 45
0 / 32
0 / 40
0 / 59
0 / 42
0 / 56
0 / 36
0 / 28
0 / 56
0 / 60
0 / 121
2006
1 / 71
1 / 25
2008
0 / 15
4 / 36
1 / 45
0 / 32
9 / 40
7 / 59
0 / 42
15 / 56
4 / 36
0 / 28
0 / 56
0 / 60
40 / 176
2011
3 / 71
3 / 49
2013
1 / 15
4 / 36
1 / 45
1 / 32
10 / 40
5 / 59
2 / 42
14 / 56
3 / 36
0 / 28
1 / 56
7 / 60
49 / 172
2016
3 / 82
5 / 40
2018
3 / 15
7 / 36
0 / 45
0 / 32
14 / 40
4 / 59
2 / 42
21 / 56
6 / 36
3 / 28
5 / 56
2 / 60
70 / 172
2020
2 / 73
2 / 7
2021
0 / 28
0 / 82
0 / 39
2022
1 / 15
5 / 59
2 / 42
1 / 56
9 / 65
2023
2 / 36
0 / 45
0 / 32
7 / 40
12 / 56
5 / 36
26 / 59
2025
1 / 73
1 / 13

See also

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